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Mudhoney

Mudhoney

  • Avg user rating: 3h stars Out of 44 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Nirvana, Tad, Skin Yard, Comets on Fire

Playlist

I'm Now (2:41) Date added: 05/12/08 | Total listens: 5,401
In 'n' Out of Grace (5:31) Date added: 05/12/08 | Total listens: 3,213
Blindspots (5:37) Date added: 07/18/06 | Total listens: 8,826
Sonic Infusion (7:41) Date added: 07/27/04 | Total listens: 19,409
The Straight Life (3:34) Date added: 07/29/04 | Total listens: 16,644

User reviews for Mudhoney

Average rating3h starsOut of 44 votes

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michell furlan

Avg user rating:
4 Stars
Out of 13 votes

Editor's review

This brash and irrepressible Seattle, Wash., foursome is possibly the only band from grunge's heyday that matters as much now as it did then. Eight albums in, Mudhoney keeps its loud, sloppy, spirited attack alive as if it could do things no other way. May the group soldier on forever.

Biography

Worldwide lovers of the finer things are rejoicing at the news that Mudhoney, yep Mudhoney, is back in vinyl and digital action in 2008 with The Lucky Ones, the band's eighth full album in a mere 20 years of triumphant rocking. The Lucky Ones redefines stripped-down, "back 2 basics" ramalama, certainly when it comes to Mudhoney's recent past. I mean, it’s not like the band’s other twenty-first century works (2002’s Since We’ve Become Translucent and 2006’s Under a Billion Suns) were proggy, topographic explorations or anything—far from it. Yet this new one is deliberately and aggressively raw. It sounds as lean and as full-on as any modern equivalent one cares to mention. Recorded in a scant 3.5 days (including overdubs) with Tucker Martine (who also recorded four songs on the previous album), Mudhoney went in armed with a batch of new material expecting to spend a fair amount of time getting it right. Bang—and bang again after some mixing—and a new album was birthed in record time, faster than anything else the band’s done to date. Quoth singer Mark Arm, “We decided that since everything came together so serendipitously that we shouldn’t fuck with it, and these 11 songs should be the album.” Arm actually doesn’t even play guitar on this one, which conjures up sumptuous visions of the man himself bounding about the live stage with a mic stand doing perennial Mudhoney encore “Hate the Police.” All guitar (lead, rhythm and histrionics) is assigned to Steve Turner this time, and listening to The Lucky Ones finds Turner’s axe-wielding deftness and heft arriving intact, with strange squalls and meaty blasts rebounding in every aural corner.

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